Light-force sensor and method for measuring axial optical-trap forces from changes in light momentum along an optic axis

ABSTRACT

An optical trap and method for measuring both transverse and longitudinal forces on a trapped particle. Laser light sources generate first and second light beams that are focused to the trap region in a counter-propagating manner for trapping the particle. Detectors measure changes in power deflections of the light beams leaving the trap region, and changes in power concentrations of the light beams leaving the trap region. A processor calculates the transverse forces on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power deflections of the light beams, and calculates the longitudinal forces on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power concentrations of the light beams. A single beam optical trap and method are also disclosed, where the second optical beam is generated by a reflection of the first optical beam off of the trapped particle.

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/504,067, filed Sep. 19, 2003.

GOVERNMENT GRANT

This invention was made with Government support under grant (Contract) No. GM-32543 awarded by the NIH and grant nos.: MBC-9118482 and DBI-9732140 awarded by the NSF. The Government has certain rights to this invention.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to optical particle trapping, and more particularly to a device and method for trapping and manipulating tiny objects using laser light, and measuring minute forces imparted on these objects both in transverse and longitudinal directions.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Devices for optically trapping small particles are better known as “optical traps” or “optical tweezers”. The technique relies on the forces created by one or more laser beams that are refracted by a microscopic object in order to trap, levitate and move that object. By focusing a laser beam though a microscope objective lens down to a very small spot (focal region), particles with high indices of refraction, such as glass, plastic, or oil droplets, are attracted to the intense regions of the beam and can be permanently trapped at the beam's focal region. Biologists are considerably interested in optical traps because minute forces can be measured with sub-picoNewton accuracy on the trapped object. Since such small forces are not accessible by conventional techniques such as scanning-force-microscopy, optical traps have become a major investigation tool in biology.

One (preferred) method to measure such forces includes capturing and analyzing the light after interacting with the particle and computing the change in momentum flux of the light due to interaction with the particle. Capturing all the light exiting the optical trap can be difficult, given that a single-beam trap needs highly marginal rays in order to trap efficiently, but even a high numerical-aperture (NA) lens may not accept all these rays when they have interacted with the particle and are deflected farther off the optic axis. In such a case, it can be difficult to capture and analyze all the light leaving the optical trap. Therefore, to address this issue, dual beam optical traps have been developed. Conventional counter-propagating beam optical traps have been used to trap particles, and measure extremely small transverse forces imparted on those particles. See for example, “Optical tweezers system measuring the change in light momentum flux”, Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 73, No. 6, June 2002. Dual-beam traps are also better than single-beam traps for trapping particles with higher refractive indices.

One drawback to conventional momentum-sensing optical traps, and in particular dual beam counter-propagating optical traps, is that they only detect and measure transverse forces on the particle (x and y directions). Conventional optical traps do not detect and measure axial forces on the particle (z direction). Additionally, counter-propagating optical traps can be difficult to align, that is, to bring the two beam foci together at a common point.

There is a need for an optical trap system (and method) that measures all three components of external forces, and that is easy align.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is desirable to obtain all 3 vector components of any external force that may be acting on a trapped particle in an optical trap (OT). As an improvement to a counter-propagating beam OT fitted with a transverse light-force sensor, the present invention includes an “axial light-force sensor” that permits simultaneous (with transverse components) measurement of the axial force component acting on a trapped particle. The invention collects and analyzes the trapping laser light after it passes through the particle and leaves the vicinity of the trap. The axial force is computed from changes in the axial light-momentum flux which, in turn, is computed from observed changes in the spatial distribution of exit light intensity at the back focal plane of the objective collection lenses. To this end, the back focal planes are re-imaged onto special light attenuators with “circular” transmission profiles. The light, which passes through the patterned attenuators, falls on planar photo-diodes where it produces current signals proportional to the axial light-momentum fluxes. Any change in the momentum-fluxes due to the particle is equal to the light force on the particle, and hence equal to the external axial force to be measured. The device is calibrated from measured constant values: the speed of light, the objective focal length and the power sensitivity of the planar photo-diode. Calibration is not affected by the shape of the particle, the power of the lasers, the sharpness of the trap focus, nor by the refractive index of the particle.

The present invention is an optical trap device for trapping a particle that includes at least one laser light source for generating first and second light beams, first and second lenses for focusing the first and second light beams to a trap region in a counter-propagating manner for trapping the particle in the trap region, a first detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the first light beam leaving the trap region, and a second detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the second light beam leaving the trap region.

In another aspect of the present invention, a method of trapping a particle includes generating first and second light beams, focusing the first and second light beams to a trap region in a counter-propagating manner for trapping the particle in the trap region, measuring changes in power deflections of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region, and measuring changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region.

In yet another aspect of the present invention, an optical trap device for trapping a particle includes a laser light source for generating a first light beam, a first lens for focusing the first light beam to a trap region for trapping the particle in the trap region, a second lens for focusing the first light beam transmitted through the trap region wherein the particle reflects a portion of the first light beam to create a second light beam that is focused by the first lens, a first detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the first light beam leaving the trap region, and a second detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the second light beam leaving the trap region.

In yet one more aspect of the present invention, a method of trapping a particle includes generating a first light beam, focusing the first light beam to a trap region for trapping the particle in the trap region wherein the particle reflects a portion of the first light beam to create a second light beam, measuring changes in power deflections of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region, and measuring changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region.

Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent by a review of the specification, claims and appended figures.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagram illustrating a particle trapped in an optical trap.

FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating the power deflection detector and circuitry for analyzing the light exiting the optical trap.

FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating the counter-propagating beam optical trap of the present invention.

FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating the power concentration detector of the present invention.

FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating a first technique for aligning the optical trap of the present invention.

FIG. 6A is a diagram illustrating a second technique for aligning the optical trap of the present invention, by deflecting the optical fiber that delivers the laser beam to the optical trap.

FIG. 6B is a diagram illustrating how the detector surface is disposed at a conjugate to the pivot point of the optical fiber.

FIG. 7A is a side view of the deflecting optical fiber beam alignment technique using piezo actuators to align the laser beams in the optical trap.

FIG. 7B is an end view of the deflecting optical fiber beam alignment technique using piezo actuators to align the laser beams in the optical trap.

FIG. 8 is a side view of an alternate embodiment of the deflecting optical fiber beam alignment technique.

FIG. 9 is a side view of a miniaturized and enclosed version of the counter-propagating beam optical trap of the present invention.

FIG. 10 is a diagram illustrating use of pixel-array detectors and digital signal processor in force-measuring optical trap apparatus.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The present invention is a method and system for measuring the light force on a trapped object by detecting the change in light's momentum when it interacts with the object.

A ray of light can be thought of as a directed stream of photons, which carries with it a momentum flux dP/dt=nW/c, where W is the power (Watts) carried by the ray, c is the speed of light and n is the refractive index of the surrounding buffer. In an optical trap containing a pair of objective lenses 2 and a particle 4 held therebetween in a trap region defined by the focal regions of the lenses, a particular ray[i] may be deflected by interaction with the particle 4 through angles θ_(i), φ_(i) relative to the optic axis of the trap, as shown in FIG. 1. The reaction force felt by the trapped particle due to that ray is given by: F _(i) =dP _(i) /dt=(nW _(i) /c)[i sin θ_(i) sin φ_(i) +k(1=cos φ_(i))].   (1)

To compute forces on a trapped particle with many rays passing nearby, it is sufficient to analyze the power of all rays entering and leaving the vicinity of the trap and sum over them according to Eqn. 1, with the sign convention such that an un-deflected ray cancels its flux contribution when it exits. Experimentally, such analysis can be performed by collecting the exiting rays with another lens opposite the trapping lens. If that collection lens is a coma-free objective lens (similar to the trap lens), and if it is placed so the trap focus is also the focus of the collection lens, then a particular version of the Abbe sine condition holds for rays that strike the collection lens. According to this rule, a ray coming from the focus and inclined at an angle θ_(i) to the optic axis will emanate from the back principal plane parallel to the optic axis at a radial distance r from that axis given by r_(i)=n sin θ_(i)R_(L)   (2) where R_(L) is the focal length of the collection lens. Combining Eqns. (1) and (2) in x-y coordinates (x=rcos φ and y=rsin φ) and summing over all rays gives an expression for the force on the particle in terms of the spatial intensity distributions W(x,y)_(enter) and W(X,Y)_(exit) of light entering and exiting the lenses. F _(x)=(1/R _(L) c)([Σ W _(i) x _(i)]_(enter) −[Σ W _(i) x _(i)]_(exit))   (3a) F _(y)=(1/R _(L) c)([Σ W _(i) y _(i)]_(enter) −[Σ W _(i) y _(i)]_(exit))   (3b) F _(z)=(n/c) {[Σ W _(i) sqrt(1−(r _(i) /nR _(L))²)]_(enter) −[Σ W _(i) sqrt(1−(r _(i) /nR _(L))²)]_(exit)}  (3c)

The distance-weighted sums of the light intensity, Σ W_(i)x_(i) and Σ W_(i)y_(i), are called the “power deflections”. These moments of the spatial intensity distribution can be measured by projecting the light exiting from the collection lens onto a position-sensitive photo-detector (PSD), also known as a power deflection detector. Such detectors are different from quadrant detectors since they comprise one continuous diode (i.e. a power deflection sensor/detector) 6, not four. They can be thought of as a planar PIN junction photodiode sandwiched between two plate resistors, as shown in FIG. 2. When a light ray strikes a particular point on the detector 6, it liberates holes and electrons in the reverse-biased diode layer that electrically connects the two planar resistors at that point. For each axis (x,y), the resulting current (which is proportional to ray power W_(i)) is divided between the two electrodes 8 at opposite edges of a resistor layer depending on the distances to each electrode from where the ray strikes. The currents from all rays striking the PSD are thus weighted by distance from the edges and summed in a linear fashion. An op-amp circuit 10 such as the one illustrated in FIG. 2 takes the 4 current signals (two into the top PSD layer and two out of the bottom) and converts them into separate signals for x- and y-distance-averaged intensities. Thus, power deflection is a measure of the powers and off-axis distances of all the light rays forming the light beam. Power deflection of the light beam increases if the overall light beam power uniformly increases and/or if the overall light beam shifts position in the positive direction, and vice versa.

The signals from a PSD amplifier (FIG. 2) are given by X=ψ Σ W _(i) x _(i) /R _(D)   (4a) Y=ψ Σ W _(i) y _(i) /R _(D)   (4b) where ψ is the power responsivity of the PSD photo-diode, R_(D) is the half-width of the square PSD detector area, x_(i) and y_(i) are the x and y components of the ray positions, and W_(i) is the power of each of those rays.

The x and y components of transverse force are given by combining Eqns. 3 and 4: F _(x) =ΔX R _(D) /c ψR _(L)   (5a) F _(y) =ΔY R _(D) /c ψR _(L)   (5b) where ΔX and ΔY represent changes in the signals from the power deflection detector induced by the X and Y components of the force applied to the particle.

The signals from a PSD detector can be used directly as the x and y force components on a trapped particle, provided the input light momentum is first nulled. That is, the PSD is pre-positioned, with no object in the trap, such that the X and Y outputs are zero. For a symmetrical input beam, this act puts the detector on the optic axis. For an asymmetric input beam, nulling the detector shifts the zero-angle reference such that the incoming light flux has zero transverse (x,y) momentum in that frame. When a particle is trapped, only the output distribution changes, not the input. Even then, the output distribution remains symmetrical (null outputs) until external forces F_(x) and F_(y) are applied to the trapped particle.

A problem for the light-force sensor derives from the necessity to collect all the exiting light to calculate the force. A single-beam optical trap can apply strong radial (x,y) trapping forces, but rather weak axial (z) forces. Unless the beam is highly convergent and includes the full set of marginal rays from a high NA objective lens, the particle may escape out the back (exit) side of a trap due to a reflection or light scattering forces on the particle. Thus, to recover all the exiting light, such a high NA trap requires a high NA collection lens. However, if an external force acts on the particle, then the output rays from the trap will be deflected even farther off axis than the input rays. For larger particle displacements, even the highest NA objectives available may not collect those exiting marginal rays. Therefore, it is preferable (but not necessary) to utilize the light-momentum method of the present invention using a dual beam optical trap, instead of a single beam optical trap, as detailed below.

It is possible, however, to trap particles with lower NA optics by using counter-propagating laser beams that converge through opposing lenses to a common focus (i.e. common focal region). Thus the reflected or scattering light force is balanced and the axial escape route is blocked. Such an instrument, a dual counter-propagating beam optical trap, has been reduced to practice and is shown schematically in FIG. 3. Vertically polarized light beams from separate diode lasers 12 (e.g. 835 nm light, at 200 mW, from SDL 5431 lasers) are sent through polarizing beam splitters 18, quarter wave plates 16, and objective lenses 2 (e.g. Nikon 60X plan-Apo-water NA 1.2), so that the light beams are circularly polarized as they encounter particle 4. The exiting light beams are collected by opposite objective lenses 2, become horizontally polarized at the opposite quarter wave plates 16, are deflected down by polarizing beam splitters 18, and are split into a pair of beams (preferably equally) by non-polarizing beam splitters 20. The first of the pair of beams are directed to power deflection detectors 22 (which measure transverse momentum of the beams) and the second of the pair of beams are directed to power concentration detectors 24 (which measure longitudinal momentum of the beams). The particle is preferably contained in a fluid chamber 14 formed by two coverslips separated by heat-sealed parafilm strips.

The high NA objective lenses 2 have the ability to focus/collect high-angle rays, but the laser beams which enter them are kept small in diameter, thus under-filling the back apertures. Therefore the trapping rays form a narrow cone (low NA beam) and the most marginal of these rays can be collected by the opposite lens 2, even when those rays are deflected outside the initial set of low inclination angles by the application of an external force to the particle 4. In this instrument, the transverse forces from the two beams add together, and hence the signals from power deflection detectors 22 must be summed to give the x and y components of transverse force on the trapped particle: F _(x)=(ΔX ₁ +ΔX ₂)R _(D) /c ψR _(L)   (6a) F _(y)=(ΔY ₁ +ΔY ₂)R _(D) /c ψR _(L)   (6b) where ΔX₁ and ΔX₂ represent changes in the signals from the first and second detectors respectively induced by the X component of the force applied to the particle, and ΔY₁ and ΔY₂ represent changes in the signals from the first and second detectors respectively induced by the Y component of the force applied to the particle.

To obtain the longitudinal force along the optic axis, F_(z), a different type of detector is utilized, namely one that measures the power concentration of the incident beam. The power concentration is a measure of cross-sectional distribution of the power within the beam. As the power of the light beam is concentrated more toward the center of the beam, its power concentration is greater. Conversely, as the beam power distribution is more spread out away from the center of the beam, its power concentration is less. Thus, for example, a power concentration detector produces a signal that increases or decreases as the power distribution within the beam becomes more concentrated toward the center of the beam, and vice versa. One example of a power concentration detector is one in which the distance-weight (sensitivity) falls off from the optic axis according to Eq. 3c, for example as sqrt (1−(r/nR_(L))²). Such response is obtained by a power concentration detector 24 having an attenuator 28 with a circular transmission profile, placed over a planar photodiode 30, as illustrated in FIG. 4. The circular transmission profile T is sqrt (1−(r/nR_(L))²), where r is now the radial distance from the center of the attenuator. One such profile generated numerically as pixels is illustrated in FIG. 4.

If the attenuator 28 is constructed so its pattern radius is nR_(L), then the detector response to light ray_(i) of intensity WI that falls a distance r_(i) from the pattern center will be Z=ψ′ Σ W _(i) sqrt(1−(r _(i) /nR _(L))²)   (7) where ψ′ is the responsivity of the planar photo-diode. By combining equations (3c) and (7), the force signal F_(z) is proportional (by a known factor) to the difference between the signals from the two opposing axial power concentration photo-detector signals, namely, F _(z)=(n/c)(ΔZ ₁ −ΔZ ₂)/ψ′.   (8) where ΔZ₁ and ΔZ₂ represent the changes in the signals from the two power concentration detectors resulting from longitudinal force on the trapped particle.

In practice, to compensate for differences in laser powers and sensitivities of the axial detector, the difference signal (ΔZ₁−ΔZ₂) is preferably nulled, by addition of an arbitrary offset, before any particle enters the trap. The signals from detectors 22/24 are preferably sent to a processor 14, which calculates particle forces and displacements utilizing the above described equations. Processor 14 could be a stand alone device, or a personal computer running appropriate software.

An advantage of the above described transverse light-force sensor is that calibration depends only on constant factors such as R_(L) and c that do not change with experimental conditions. Force is obtained from the conservation of linear momentum of light as measured in the far field. Thus the measurement of force becomes independent of trap/bead details such as shape and size of the particle and refractive indices. Unfortunately, for the above described axial force sensor, its calibration changes with the refractive index of the fluid buffer surrounding the particle. For instance, adding 1 molar NaCl to water inside the fluid chamber changes its index from 1.334 to 1.343. Such a −1% correction could simply be applied to the values in Eq. 8, except that the circular-profile attenuator is constructed with a particular radius suitable for water (Eq. 7). For typical rays, where r/nR_(L)<0.5, the residual z-force error will be very small, i.e. less than ¼ percent.

Due to changes in room temperature or humidity and its effect on many optical parts, an optical trap with dual counter-propagating beams requires constant alignment in order to keep the foci (focal regions) of the counter-propagating beams coincident. Such alignment involves moving one trap focus to lie on top of the other. To move a focus, either the beam angle must be steered as it enters the back of the objective lens, or else the whole objective lens must be moved. FIG. 5 illustrates a solution of the latter type, where the optical trap of FIG. 4 is modified so that one of the objective lenses 2 is movable with a piezo-actuated x-y-z stage 32 to overlap the foci. Other modifications include the addition of second polarizing beam splitters 34 and relay lenses 36. If a particle has been trapped, this means the foci of the two counter-propagating beams are close enough to maintain the trap, and there is insufficient external forces on the particle to break the particle free. But if the foci are slightly misaligned, then the trap beams will exert force on each other (trade momentum) via their common interaction with the particle.

While an external transverse force on the trapped particle deflects both exiting beams in the same direction, a transverse misalignment of the foci causes the exit beams to be deflected in opposite directions. In this case, information to correct the alignment error (by moving the objective lens) may be derived from the differential force signals. Whereas the F_(x) is proportional to the sum of PSD signals ΔX₁+ΔX₂, the x-axis alignment error is proportional to their difference, namely ΔX₁−ΔX₂. To control transverse alignment, an instrument computer uses a proportional-integrative-differential (PID) feedback algorithm to move the piezo stage based on readings from the transverse force sensors of power deflection detectors 22. Here the x-axis error signal is ΔX₁−ΔX₂ and the y-axis error signal is ΔY₁−ΔY₂.

Foci may also be misaligned along the optic axis, that is, they may form short of each other or past each other along the z-axis. In the former case (falling short), the two beams pull each other forward via their common interaction with the trapped particle, and increase both their forward momenta. Thus both beams get smaller (more concentrated) about the optic axis, increasing their transmission through the patterned attenuators (axial-force sensors). In the latter case (foci formed past each other), the beams retard each other and their exit angles widen, decreasing their transmission through the patterned attenuators. An axial-alignment error signal can be derived from comparison of current axial sensor outputs with a particle in the trap, (Z₁+Z₂)_(full), to that of a previous measurement when the trap was empty, (Z₁+Z₂)_(empty). However the “empty” measurement is not current and would need to change if the laser power changes with time. Therefore it is best to normalize the ΔZ signals by their respective laser powers, as measured by the power deflection detector “sum” outputs (see FIG. 2). Then, the improved z-axis error signal becomes: z-error=(Z ₁/Sum₁ +Z ₂/Sum₂)_(full)−(Z ₁/Sum₁ +Z ₂/Sum₂)_(empty).   (9) This axial error signal is processed by the computer's PID algorithm and fed back to the z-axis piezo of the objective XYZ stage 32. Alternately, if an optical fiber is used to deliver the laser beam to the lens 2, the distance between the delivery end of the optical fiber and the lens 2 can be adjusted based on the error signal to align the foci of the two beams. Such a system corrects temperature drift in the axial alignment of the foci.

The counter-propagating-beam laser optical trap of the present invention utilizes specialized photometric sensors placed in (or referenced to) the back focal planes of objective lenses to measure changes in the spatial distribution of light intensity there, changes caused by some action on the trapped particle. The beam trap manipulates micron-sized refracting particles while simultaneously measuring external forces on that particle via changes in the momentum of the trapping light. The beam trap of the present invention can measure pico-Newton external forces of the particle in all three orthogonal axes.

For example, as illustrated in FIG. 3, a molecule 40 can be attached between particle 4 and a pipette 42, to examine its mechanical properties. As the pipette 42 is moved to exert mechanical stresses on the molecule, the force exerted in the molecule can be measured by the optical trap. With the present invention, all three force components (F_(x), F_(y), F_(z)) on the trapped particle, and thus on the molecule attached thereto, can be measured. Calibrations for both transverse and axial measurements are immune to changes in focus sharpness, particle size/shape/index, or laser power, and both can be used for alignment of dual trap beam foci, either against transverse errors or longitudinal errors. Calibration of the transverse force sensor is immune to changes in refractive index of buffer liquid, whereas longitudinal sensor calibration is affected slightly.

FIGS. 6A, 6B, 7A, 7B and 8 illustrate an alternate embodiment for the alignment of the optical trap. Instead of moving one of the beams by moving one of the objective lenses 2, the beam is transversely moved in the trap (or in any other application) by moving the light beam before it reaches the objective lens 2 using an actuator assembly 44 that bends an optical fiber about a pivot point. Specifically, as shown in FIG. 6A, the optical output of the laser diode 12 is coupled into a low-mass optical fiber 46, which has a generally rigid portion that is moved (driven) with actuators (e.g. piezo-electric devices) to achieve a high frequency response (>2 kHz). The delivery end 62 of the optical fiber 46 is positioned one focal-length (F) away from a positive lens 48 so as to produce collimated light which enters the back of an infinity-corrected microscope objective lens 2. The optical fiber 46 is held at a pivot point X (farther from the lens) by a plate, block or other rigid member 52, such that the optical fiber pivots about that point (with a bend length BL) when the actuators move.

Pivot-point X is a conjugate focal point (through the collimating lens 48) to a point at the center of the objective lens' back focal plane (BFP), which is a plane perpendicular to the optic axis at back focus of the lens. Pivoting the optical fiber in this manner actually tilts the optical fiber delivery end 62 away from the center of lenses 2 and 48. Yet, this movement causes the angle of light entering the objective lens 2 to change (thus steering the trap focus transversely) while the beam remains stationary at the BFP of the objective lens 2 (i.e. the beam rotates about the BFP of lens 2). Thus, the light beam pivots about an optical pivot point P (at the BFP) as the optical fiber pivots about its mechanical pivot point X. The advantage of this configuration is that it provides a faster response time in translating the beam on the far side of lens 2, as required for constant-position feedback that cancels Brownian motion in the optical trap.

Calibration stability for the optical trap derives from accurate measurement of light-momentum flux irrespective of changes in particle size, refractive index or trap position. The relay lenses 36 are used to make the calibration particularly immune to changes in trap position. The expression in Equations 3(a-c) are accurate provided that the rays in FIG. 1 between the right-hand lens 2 and the detector surface are collimated and on-axis. In practice, however, rays coming out of a lens are seldom perfectly collimated or centered. Indeed for a steered trap shown in FIG. 6A, the rays entering and leaving the lenses are deliberately made off-axis. The problem of transferring the luminance pattern (intensity distribution) from the lens 2 to the detectors 22/24 would be exacerbated by a large distance between the lens and detectors because the pattern wanders further off axis with distance or grows larger/smaller depending on collimation errors. The ideal place to put the detector to eliminate such effects is at the Back-Focal Plane (BFP) of the lens 2. At that location, changes in trap position relative to the optic axis will not affect the rendering of angle distributions Eq. 1 into spatial distributions on the detectors (Equations 3). Unfortunately the BFP is generally located somewhere inside of a typical microscope objective lens. To effectively place the detectors 22/24 inside such a lens, a relay lens 36 is used to project the BFP onto the surface of the detectors. That is, the detector surfaces of detectors 22/24 are disposed at a conjugate focal plane to the BFP of the objective lens 2 through a separate relay lens 36.

A particular example of a conjugate-plane arrangement that gives null sensitivity to trap movement is illustrated in FIG. 6B. Here the fiber's pivot-point X is conjugate to the BFP₁ (back focal plane of the first, left-hand, objective lens 2). The light beam from the fiber end does not translate at BFP₁, but rather pivots around the optic axis at the BFP₁ as the fiber is pivoted. Meanwhile, the optical beam at the optical trap (at the objective lens focus) translates in the object-focal plane in order to manipulate trapped particles. The two objective lenses 2 are placed so their object focal planes OFP's are coincident. Therefore, the BFP₂ (back focal plane of the second, right-hand, objective lens 2) becomes conjugate to the BFP₁ and also conjugate to pivot-point X. Thus the beam of light does not translate at the BFP₂, but instead pivots around the optic axis there. In this example, a relay lens 36 of focal length A is placed half way between the BFP₂ and the surface of one of the detectors 22/24. A distance of 2A (double the focal length A) is left on both sides of the relay lens 36 (between BFP₂ and the relay lens 36, and between the relay lens 36 and detector 22/24). The BFP₂ is therefore imaged onto the detector surface with unity magnification. The detector surface becomes conjugate to BFP₂, and thus to BFP₁, and thus to pivot-point X. The light beam does not translate at the detector surface when the optical fiber is pivoted and the optical trap is moved. Once the detector 22/24 is centered on the optic axis of the light beam, the force signal remains null regardless of trap movement if nothing is in the trap to deflect the light beam. In practice, the light beam is split (as shown in FIG. 5) so that the surfaces of both detector 22 and detector 24 are conjugate to the pivot-point X.

FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrates an actuator assembly 44 of the present invention. The optical fiber 46 is pivoted by placing its delivery end inside a thin metal tube 50 that is clamped or otherwise fixed by plate or block 52. The optical fiber 46 is preferably cemented to the tube 50 at its distal end so it moves with the tube-end 54. The optical fiber emits light outward from the tube-end 54 (preferably the tube end and fiber distal end are adjacent or even coincident). The portions of tube 50 and optical fiber 46 therein extending from plate/block 52 together form a generally rigid portion of the optical fiber, and plate/block 52 serves as a support member for pivoting this rigid portion. Electrical signals are supplied to piezo stack actuators 56 (such as NEC Corp. AE0203D08), which exert forces on and deflect the tube 50 (and optical fiber 46 therein). Two such actuators 56 preferably act on a hard spherical enlargement 58 (“ball pivot”) of the tube 50, and are arranged at right angles so as to give orthogonal bending deflections and thus steer the laser-trap beam focus in both transverse dimensions of the object focal plane. Placing the ball pivot 58 close to the pivot point X and far from the tube's distal end amplifies the movement of the tube end 54. Thus a piezo stack that moves a short distance can cause the optical fiber delivery end to move a large distance. Z-axis adjustment can be implemented by moving the entire piezo actuator assembly 44 (along with lens 2) via a stage or a third piezo actuator.

FIG. 8 illustrates an alternate embodiment of the actuator assembly 44 of the present invention. Depending on the focal length of the collimating lens 48 and the distance to the BFP, pivot point X may need to be rather close (e.g. <1 cm) to the delivery end 62 of the optical fiber 46. Therefore, considering the large size of the actuators 56 and spherical enlargement 58, the actuator assembly 44 can be configured as illustrated in FIG. 8, where the optical fiber 46 pivots nearer its output end 62 (i.e. pivot point X is close to the fiber delivery end). With this configuration, actuators 56 push/pull on and bend an outer tube 60 (which concentrically surrounds tube 50). The outer tube 60 preferably includes a pivot screen 64 disposed at its distal end, which is an electro-formed metal screen having small square holes. The glass optical fiber 46 extends out of tube 50 and passes through one of these holes and rests in the square corner of that hole. Nearby, the optical fiber 46 is clamped or otherwise secured inside tube 50, which does not move. Sufficient clearance exists between tubes 50/60 such that the outer tube 60 can bend from the actuator pressure (i.e. pivot about pivot point Y), while the inner tube 50 remains straight. Thus, in this embodiment, it is the inner tube 50 serves as the support member for the generally rigid portion of the fiber, and the generally rigid portion of the optical fiber is that portion of optical fiber 46 extending out of inner tube 50. This portion of the optical fiber is generally rigid by either sufficient reinforcement (separate tube or plastic sheathing) or small enough in length relative to its inherent stiffness, such that it generally does not bend under the weight of gravity as it pivots. Outer tube 60 is affixed to support member 52 and pivots about pivot point Y, which induces the generally rigid portion of optical fiber 46 to pivot about pivot point X as the optical fiber is deflected by the movement of the pivot screen 64. This configuration has two levels of distance-amplification over the normal actuator movement: one level where the distal end of the outer tube 60 moves farther than the actuators 56, and another level where the output-end 62 of the optical fiber 46 moves farther than the pivot screen 64 (at end of the outer tube 60).

FIG. 9 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention that allows for more precise force/distance measurements that are not hindered by floor vibration, acoustic noise, and room temperature changes. A large apparatus on an optical table is especially difficult to isolate from vibrations if it sits on a floor that people walk on. Air-leg supports on such tables can transmit and even amplify low-frequency floor vibrations (below 5 Hz). Large metal tables also undergo large dimensional changes when the room temperature changes. A steel table 1-meter wide can expand over 10,000 nanometers for each 1-degree C rise in room temperature. By reducing the optical trap apparatus in size, it becomes practical to enclose all optical elements in a temperature-controlled metallic shield (to prevent temperature induced dimensional changes, exclude dust particles and block audible room noise). Likewise, it becomes possible to hang the apparatus from the ceiling by an elastic cord or spring and thus better isolate it from building/floor vibrations, down to a lower frequency cutoff than an optical table (<1 Hz).

Thus, the above described counter-propagating-beam laser optical trap can be miniaturized by making five changes: (1) All lens and prism components are reduced to minimum size consistent with laser-beam diameter. (2) All free-air optical paths are reduced to a minimum length. (3) The optical breadboard-table is replaced by a custom-machined optical rail. (4) Many parts in the laser conditioning optics (namely the heating/cooling diode laser mount with collimating lens and Faraday isolator and anamorphic prism and astigmatism correction lens and spatial filter input lens and pinhole filter and spatial filter output lens) are replaced with by single small component, that is, a “butterfly mount” temperature-controlled diode laser coupled to single-mode optical fiber. (5) Finally, the assembled optical components are enclosed in an aluminum housing with attached heaters (thermostatically controlled to maintain constant housing temperature). Two additional improvements can include: placing the objective lenses and fluid chamber level with or below the optical components so that if a fluid leak occurs then the salt-buffers will drip downward away from the optics, and employing the above described object-focal plane, piezo-electric driven optical beam translators for independent translation of the laser-trap foci.

Consistent with the above described miniaturization, optical trap of FIG. 9 includes a housing 70 (preferably made of aluminum), the temperature of which is controlled by one or more thermostatic heaters 72. The optical components are mounted to an optical rail 74, with the objective lenses 2, the prism/lens assemblies 76 (which includes the beam splitters 18, quarter wave plates 16, etc.), the piezo actuator assemblies 44, the detectors 22/24 and the laser diodes 12 mounted even with or above the fluid chamber 26. A CCD camera 78 and visible light source 80 can be included for capturing images of the particles through the optical chain of objective lenses. An attachment ring 84 and cords 86 (e.g. vibration dampening elastic or bungee type chords) are used to suspend the housing 70.

While longitudinal momentum measurements are more conveniently measured using an optical trap with counter-propagating beams as described above and shown in FIGS. 3-5 and 9, it should be noted that it is possible to perform such measurements using an optical trap with a single beam, as now explained below.

An external force on a trapped particle registers as a change in the light momentum entering vs. leaving the trap. Therefore it is important to know both the light intensity distribution going into the trap and coming out, to make a valid force measurement. For transverse forces, this task is simplified by moving the power deflection detectors 22 to a position that is centered on the undeflected beam. This adjustment is made with lasers 12 running but no particle in the trap. More specifically, the power deflection detectors 22 measure only the light exiting the trap, not entering it, so they perform only half of the integration required in Equations 3. This problem is solved by aligning the detectors on the optic axis so that, when no particle is present in the trap, the output beams are centered on the detectors and the difference signals vanish. The light entering the trap carries no transverse momentum in this frame of reference and need not be considered even after a particle has been introduced. Only the exiting light is affected by interaction with the particle.

However there is no way to move a power concentration detector as shown in FIG. 3 so as to null its output when the laser is on and no particle is in the trap. For axial forces, Eq. 3(C) also must be “differenced” in order to give the proper Z-axis force. The signals for each power concentration detector should be performed in 2 steps as follows: measure a signal value Z_(initial) with no particle in the trap, and then measure a signal value Z_(final) with an object in the trap, and take the difference ΔZ=Z_(final)−Z_(initial). If this ΔZ=0, then no external force is acting on the beam of light detected by that particular PSD. Accordingly, Eq. (7) can be modified to read: Z=ψ′{[Σ W _(i) sqrt(1−(r _(i) /nR _(L))²)]_(final) −[ΣW _(i) sqrt(1−(r _(i) /nR _(L))²)]_(initial})  (10) and the corrected form of Eq. 8 for a single-beam trap might seem to be simply F _(z)=(n/c)(ΔZ)/ψ′.   (11) Unfortunately, a further consideration complicates force measurements in a single-beam trap (or for a dual-beam where the laser powers are different). Most trapped particles, such as plastic or silica beads, are not anti-reflection coated. Therefore a small Fresnel reflection develops at their dielectric/water interface. This reflection of the trapping beam creates a pressure on a trapped particle that moves it forward in the trap (away from the laser source). At some equilibrium position, the forward force is balanced by a refraction force. Here the forward momentum of the transmitted light is increased by concentrating the rays near the optic axis, just enough to balance the momentum kick from the reflected light. Placing a particle in a single-beam trap will cause it to settle slightly forward in the trap and increase Z_(final) over Z_(initial), even though there is no external force on the particle.

There are several possible techniques to deal with this false Z-force component of the detector signal: First, use a dual-beam optical trap with two counter-propagating beams of equal power, so the particle remains in the center of the trap. Second, make differential measurements where Z_(initial) is determined from a trapped particle but it is known that the external force on that particle is zero. Then, apply the external force and measure Z_(final). Such a technique may be inconvenient to use in practice. Third, use a single beam, but use two power deflection detectors 22 and two power concentration detectors 24 in a similar manner as shown in FIG. 3 (i.e. essentially omit one of the lasers 12 from the configuration of this figure). This third technique is now explained in more detail.

The detectors 22/24 of FIG. 3 measure the transmitted light from the opposite-side laser. However, with the arrangement of the quarter-wave plates 16, any reflected light from a particle is collected by the near-side objective lens 2 and directed back into the near-side detectors 22/24. The reflected light is therefore correctly counted as momentum flux to compute force. Thus, by omitting one of the lasers from the configuration of FIG. 3, one set of detectors 22/24 is used to measure the transmitted light and the other set of detectors 22/24 is used to measure the reflected light. To measure Z-force in such a configuration, the Z_(initial) signal is first obtained for both transmitted and reflected light with no particle in the trap. Then, a particle is trapped that is subject to an arbitrary external force, where the Z_(final) signal is measured for both the transmitted and reflected light according to: Z _(transmitted) =Z _(transmitted-final) −Z _(transmitted-initial)   (12a) Z _(reflected) =Z _(reflected-final) −Z _(reflected-initial)   (12b) Thus, the force signal F_(z) is: F _(z)=(n/c)(ΔZ _(transmitted) −ΔZ _(reflected))/ψ′.   (13) This is physically the same measurement as that of the dual-beam optical trap according to Eq. 8.

It should be noted that each set of detectors 22/24 can be combined into a single detector that measures both transverse and longitudinal momentum of the light beam. More specifically, the power deflection detector 22, the power concentration detector 24 and the beam splitter 20 can be replaced with a single detector 90 as shown in FIG. 10. Detector 90 includes a 2-dimensional array of light-sensitive elements (pixels) with an appropriate electronic read-out interface. The pixel intensities could be read into a computer or control circuit where calculation of forces are made numerically by weighting the individual pixel intensities by their distances from the optic axis, and combining them according to Eq. 3. Alternately, the pixel intensities could be processed locally (on the detector chip) to extract moments of the pixel-intensity distribution. In using detector 90, W_(i) would be the light intensity at a specific pixel, the distance x_(i) would correspond to the x-coordinate of that pixel (relative to center=0), the distance y_(i) would be its y-coordinate, and its radius would be given by r_(i)=sqrt(x_(i) ²+y_(i) ²). A CCD television camera and frame-grabber would suffice for collecting such data, especially if the frequency response (including exposure, readout and computation time) exceeds 5000 Hz in order to cancel Brownian motion inside the trap. Newly developed high-speed cameras and frame grabbers are now available (see for example EPIX, Inc, http://www.epixcorp.com/products/pixci_cl3sd.htm). The signal processor 100 would then receive digital data from two such camera/frame-grabber combinations. A new class of digital PSD (also called “profile sensor”) is available that promises both low cost and high speed in a pixel-array detector. These detectors pre-process the pixel data on the same chip as the pixel array so as to reduce the amount of serial data that needs to be sent to the computer, i.e., the frame-grabber-processor function is “built-in” (see for example, Hamamatsu (Solid State Division) Profile Sensor S9132 Preliminary Data Sheet January, 2004; and “High Speed Digital CMOS 2D Optical Position Sensitive Detector” by Massari et al. at the European Solid State Circuit Conference (ESSCIRC) in 2002, available online at http://www.itc.it/soi_publications/pub/43.pdf).

It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiment(s) described above and illustrated herein, but encompasses any and all variations falling within the scope of the appended claims. For example, as used herein, collimating lenses or lenses that collimate simply make a diverging or converging light beam more collimated, and do not necessarily make the resulting light beam perfectly collimated. Therefore, as used herein, a collimated beam is one that is less diverging/converging than it was before passing through a collimating lens. A single lens could include a plurality of lenses, and vice versa. A single laser device could produce the pair of counter-propagating light beams (e.g. by using a beam splitter), instead of two light sources shown in FIG. 3. While actuators 56 are preferably piezo-electric devices, they could be any conventional mechanical device for moving or applying force onto the optical fiber. The generally rigid portions of optical fiber 46 between the pivot point X and the optical fiber output end 62 need not necessarily be straight, but should be sufficiently rigid to preserve the exit angle of the beam relative to the optical fiber as the optical fiber pivots. The screen 64 could be replaced by a ledge, an eyelet, a constricted end, or simply omitted altogether (should the end of outer tube 60 sufficiently control the rigid portion of the optical fiber). For the above described equations and the single or dual beam device of FIG. 3, one in the art will appreciate that if the focal lengths R_(L) of the collection lenses are unequal, or the power responsitivities ψ of the power deflection detectors 22 are unequal, or the power responsitivities ψ′ of the power concentration detectors 22 are unequal, or the half-width of the square area R_(D) of the power deflection detectors 22 are unequal, then the equations discussed above can be expanded accordingly. For example, equation 6a (F_(x)=(ΔX₁+ΔX₂) R_(D)/c ψR_(L)) is a short hand expression for F_(s)=ΔX₁R_(D1)/cψ₁R_(L2)+ΔX₂R_(D2)/cψ₂R_(L1), and equation 6b (F_(y)=(ΔY₁+ΔY₂) R_(D)/c ψR_(L)) is a short hand expression for F_(y)=ΔY₁R_(D1)/cψ₁R_(L2)+ΔY₂R_(D2)/cψ₂R_(L1), to accommodate any unequal characteristics of the first and second lenses 2, first and second power deflection detectors 20, and first and second power concentration detectors 24. For differing focal length objective lenses, the patterned attenuators 28 may need to be different as well. The portion of optical fiber 46 between the pivot point X and the optical fiber output end 62 need not be straight, but should be rigid to preserve the exit angle of the beam from the optical fiber. Lastly, if the above described detectors are not nulled by centering them on the beam, then nulling can be performed by subtracting from the signals that portion of the signal that exists caused by the non-centered beam (i.e. measure signal using light beam without particle in trap, or from particle in trap with no forces thereon). 

1. An optical trap device for trapping a particle, the device comprising: at least one laser light source for generating first and second light beams; first and second lenses for focusing the first and second light beams to a trap region in a counter-propagating manner for trapping the particle in the trap region; a first detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the first light beam leaving the trap region; and a second detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the second light beam leaving the trap region.
 2. The optical trap device of claim 1, wherein: the first detector includes a first power deflection detector and a first power concentration detector; and the second detector includes a second power deflection detector and a second power concentration detector.
 3. The optical trap device of claim 1, further comprising: a processor for calculating a transverse force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power deflections of the first and second light beams, and for calculating a longitudinal force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power concentrations of the first and second light beams.
 4. The optical trap device of claim 3, wherein: the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio 1/cR_(L), where R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses and c is the speed of light.
 5. The optical trap device of claim 3, wherein: the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio R_(D)/cψR_(L), where ψ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D) is a square area half-width, of at least one of the first and second detectors, R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 6. The optical trap device of claim 3, wherein: the first detector produces first and second signals that change by ΔX₁ and ΔY₁ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the first light beam; the second detector produces third and fourth signals that change by ΔX₂ and ΔY₂ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the second light beam; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by: calculating a first component F_(x) of the transverse force according to F _(x) =ΔX ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔX ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), and  calculating a second component F_(y) of the transverse force according to F _(y) =ΔY ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔY ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), wherein: ψ₁ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D1) is a square area half-width, of the first detector, ψ₂ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D2) is a square area half-width, of the second detector, R_(L1) is a focal length of the first lens R_(L2) is a focal length of the second lens, and c is the speed of light.
 7. The optical trap device of claim 3, the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and wherein the processor calculates the longitudinal force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 8. The optical trap device of claim 3, wherein: the first detector produces a first signal that changes by ΔZ₁ in response to the measured power concentration change of the first light beam; the second detector produces a second signal that changes by ΔZ₂ in response to the measured power concentration change of the second light beam; and the processor calculates the longitudinal force F_(z) on the particle according to F_(z)=(n/c)(ΔZ₁−ΔZ₂)/ψ′, where n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle and ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors.
 9. The optical trap device of claim 2, wherein the first and second power concentration detectors each comprise: a photo-diode detector; and an attenuator with a circular transmission profile of increasing or decreasing light transmission T as a function of distance from a center of the attenuator.
 10. The optical trap device of claim 9, wherein the transmission T of the attenuator decreases as a function of distance r from the center of the attenuator according to: T=sqrt(1−(r/nR _(L))²).
 11. The optical trap device of claim 1, further comprising: a stage for moving the first lens and aligning a focal region of the first lens with the trap region.
 12. The optical trap device of claim 1, further comprising: optical fibers for delivering the first and second light beams to the first and second lenses; and at least one actuator for exerting a force on and causing a pivoting of delivery ends of the optical fibers.
 13. The optical trap device of claim 12, wherein for each of the optical fibers: a first tube surrounds the delivery end such that the at least one actuator exerts the force on the first tube for pivoting the optical fiber delivery end.
 14. The optical trap device of claim 13, wherein for each of the optical fibers: a second tube surrounds the delivery end and is surrounded by the first tube such that the first tube pivots the optical fiber delivery end as the first tube is moved by the at least one actuator.
 15. The optical trap device of claim 1, further comprising: a rail on which the first and second lenses and the first and second detectors are mounted; and a fluid chamber mounted to the rail and containing the particle, wherein the fluid chamber extends into the trap region.
 16. The optical trap device of claim 15, further comprising: a housing containing the rail, the first and second lenses, the first and second detectors, and the fluid chamber; and a heating device for maintaining an interior of the housing at a predetermined temperature.
 17. The optical trap device of claim 15, wherein the fluid chamber is mounted even with or below the first and second lenses.
 18. The optical trap device of claim 1, wherein the first and second detectors each include a 2-dimensional array of light-sensitive elements.
 19. The optical trap device of claim 3, wherein: the first detector produces a first signal that changes from Z_(1empty) to Z_(1full) in response to the particle entering the trap region and the measured power concentration change of the first light beam; the second detector produces a second signal that changes from Z_(2empty) to Z_(2full) in response to the particle entering the trap region and the measured power concentration change of the second light beam; and the processor generates an error signal {(Z₁+Z₂)_(full)−(Z₁+Z₂)_(empty)} for moving a focus of the first light beam in the trap region relative to a focus of the second light beam in the trap region.
 20. The optical trap device of claim 19, further comprising: a stage for moving the first lens, or an optical fiber end delivering the first beam to the first lens, in response to the error signal.
 21. A method of trapping a particle, comprising: generating first and second light beams; focusing the first and second light beams to a trap region in a counter-propagating manner for trapping the particle in the trap region; measuring changes in power deflections of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region; and measuring changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region.
 22. The method of claim 21, further comprising: calculating a transverse force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power deflections of the first and second light beams; and calculating a longitudinal force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power concentrations of the first and second light beams.
 23. The method of claim 22, wherein: the focusing of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second lenses; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is preformed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio 1/cR_(L), where R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 24. The method of claim 22, wherein: the focusing of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second lenses; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio R_(D)/cψR_(L), where ψ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D) is a square area half-width, of at least one of the first and second detectors, R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 25. The method of claim 22, wherein: the focusing of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second lenses; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using a first detector that produces first and second signals which change by ΔX₁ and ΔY₁ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the first light beam; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using a second detector that produces third and fourth signals which change by ΔX₂ and ΔY₂ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the second light beam; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes: calculating a first component F_(x) of the transverse force according to F _(x) =ΔX ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) ΔX ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), and  calculating a second component F_(y) of the transverse force according to F _(y) =ΔY ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔY ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), wherein: ψ₁ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D1) is a square area half-width, of the first detector, ψ₂ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D2) is a square area half-width, of the second detector, R_(L1) is a focal length of the first lens R_(L2) is a focal length of the second lens, and c is the speed of light.
 26. The method of claim 22, wherein: the measuring of the changes in power concentrations is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the longitudinal force on the particle includes multiplying the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 27. The method of claim 22, wherein: the measuring of the changes in power concentrations is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the longitudinal force on the particle includes multiplying a difference between the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 28. The method of claim 22, wherein the measuring of the changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second detectors, the method further comprising: attenuating the first and second light beams before reaching the first and second photo-detectors in a manner that a transmission of the first and second light beams increases or decreases as a function of a distance from a center of the first or second light beams.
 29. The method of claim 28, wherein the transmission of the first and second light beams decreases as a function of distance r from the center of the first or second light beams according to sqrt(1−(r/nR_(L))²).
 30. The method of claim 21, wherein the focusing of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second lenses, and wherein the first and second light beams are delivered to the first and second lenses via first and second optical fibers, the method further comprising: exerting a force on and causing a pivoting of delivery ends of the first and second optical fibers.
 31. The method of claim 21, wherein: producing a first signal that changes from Z_(1empty) to Z_(1full) in response to the particle entering the trap region and the measured power concentration change of the first light beam; producing a second signal that changes from Z_(empty) to Z_(2full) in response to the particle entering the trap region and the measured power concentration change of the second light beam; and generating an error signal {(Z₁+Z₂)_(full)−(Z₁+Z₂)_(empty)} for moving a focus of the first light beam in the trap region relative to a focus of the second light beam in the trap region.
 32. The method of claim 31, further comprising: moving the first lens, or an optical fiber end delivering the first beam to the first lens, in response to the error signal.
 33. An optical trap device for trapping a particle, the device comprising: a laser light source for generating a first light beam; a first lens for focusing the first light beam to a trap region for trapping the particle in the trap region; a second lens for collecting the first light beam transmitted through the trap region, wherein the particle reflects a portion of the first light beam to create a second light beam that is collected by the first lens; a first detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the first light beam leaving the trap region; and a second detector for measuring changes in a power deflection and in a power concentration of the second light beam leaving the trap region.
 34. The optical trap device of claim 33, wherein: the first detector includes a first power deflection detector and a first power concentration detector; and the second detector includes a second power deflection detector and a second power concentration detector.
 35. The optical trap device of claim 33, further comprising: a processor for calculating a transverse force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power deflections of the first and second light beams, and for calculating a longitudinal force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power concentrations of the first and second light beams.
 36. The optical trap device of claim 35, wherein: the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio 1/cR_(L), where R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses and c is the speed of light.
 37. The optical trap device of claim 35, wherein: the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio R_(D)/cψR_(L), where ψ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D) is a square area half-width, of at least one of the first and second detectors, R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 38. The optical trap device of claim 35, wherein: the first detector produces first and second signals that change by ΔX₁ and ΔY₁ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the first light beam; the second detector produces third and fourth signals that change by ΔX₂ and ΔY₂ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the second light beam; and the processor calculates the transverse force on the particle by: calculating a first component F_(x) of the transverse force according to F _(x) =ΔX ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔX ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), and  calculating a second component F_(y) of the transverse force according to F _(y) =ΔY ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔY ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), wherein: ψ₁ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D1) is a square area half-width, of the first detector, ψ₂ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D2) is a square area half-width, of the second detector, R_(L1) is a focal length of the first lens R_(L2) is a focal length of the second lens, and c is the speed of light.
 39. The optical trap device of claim 35, wherein: the first and second detectors produce first and second signals that change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and wherein the processor calculates the longitudinal force on the particle by multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 40. The optical trap device of claim 35, wherein: the first detector produces a first signal that changes by ΔZ₁ in response to the measured power concentration change of the first light beam; the second detector produces a second signal that changes by ΔZ₂ in response to the measured power concentration change of the second light beam; and the processor calculates the longitudinal force F_(z) on the particle according to F_(z)=(n/c)(ΔZ₁−ΔZ₂)/ψ′, where n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle and ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors.
 41. The optical trap device of claim 34, wherein the first and second power concentration detectors each comprise: a photo-diode detector; and an attenuator with a circular transmission profile of increasing or decreasing light transmission T as a function of distance from a center of the attenuator.
 42. The optical trap device of claim 41, wherein the transmission T of the attenuator decreases as a function of distance r from the center of the attenuator according to: T=sqrt(1−(r/nR _(L))²).
 43. The optical trap device of claim 33, further comprising: a stage for moving the first lens and aligning a focal region of the first lens with the trap region.
 44. The optical trap device of claim 33, further comprising: an optical fiber for delivering the first light beam to the first lens; and at least one actuator for exerting a force on and causing a pivoting of delivery end of the optical fiber.
 45. The optical trap device of claim 44, further comprising: a first tube surrounding the delivery end such that the at least one actuator exerts the force on the first tube for pivoting the optical fiber delivery end.
 46. The optical trap device of claim 45, further comprising: a second tube that surrounds the delivery end and is surrounded by the first tube such that the first tube pivots the optical fiber delivery end as the first tube is moved by the at least one actuator.
 47. The optical trap device of claim 33, further comprising: a rail on which the first and second lenses and the first and second detectors are mounted; and a fluid chamber mounted to the rail and containing the particle, wherein the fluid chamber extends into the trap region.
 48. The optical trap device of claim 47, further comprising: a housing containing the rail, the first and second lenses, the first and second detectors, and the fluid chamber; and a heating device for maintaining an interior of the housing at a predetermined temperature.
 49. The optical trap device of claim 47, wherein the fluid chamber is mounted even with or below the first and second lenses.
 50. The optical trap device of claim 33, wherein the first and second detectors each include a 2-dimensional array of light-sensitive elements.
 51. A method of trapping a particle, comprising: generating a first light beam; focusing the first light beam to a trap region for trapping the particle in the trap region, wherein the particle reflects a portion of the first light beam to create a second light beam; measuring changes in power deflections of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region; and measuring changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams leaving the trap region.
 52. The method of claim 51, further comprising: calculating a transverse force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power deflections of the first and second light beams; and calculating a longitudinal force on the particle based upon the measured changes in the power concentrations of the first and second light beams.
 53. The method of claim 52, wherein: the focusing of the first light beam is performed by a first lens such that the focused first light beam is collected by a second lens and the second light beam is collected by the first lens; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio 1/cR_(L), where R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 54. The method of claim 52, wherein: the focusing of the first light beam is performed by a first lens such that the focused first light beam is collected by a second lens and the second light beam is collected by the first lens; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power deflection changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes multiplying the changes in the first and second signals by a ratio R_(D)/cψR_(L), where ψ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D) is a square area half-width, of at least one of the first and second detectors, R_(L) is a focal length of at least one of the first and second lenses, and c is the speed of light.
 55. The method of claim 52, wherein: the focusing of the first light beam is performed by a first lens such that the focused first light beam is collected by a second lens and the second light beam is collected by the first lens; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using a first detector that produces first and second signals which change by ΔX₁ and ΔY₁ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the first light beam; the measuring of changes in the power deflections is performed using a second detector that produces third and fourth signals which change by ΔX₂ and ΔY₂ respectively in response to orthogonal x and y components of the measured power deflection change of the second light beam; and the calculation of the transverse force on the particle includes: calculating a first component F_(x) of the transverse force according to F _(x) =ΔX ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔX ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), and  calculating a second component F_(y) of the transverse force according to F _(y) =ΔY ₁ R _(D1) /cψ ₁ R _(L2) +ΔY ₂ R _(D2) /cψ ₂ R _(L1), wherein: ψ₁ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D1) is a square area half-width, of the first detector, ψ₂ is a power responsitivity, and R_(D2) is a square area half-width, of the second detector, R_(L1) is a focal length of the first lens R_(L2) is a focal length of the second lens, and c is the speed of light.
 56. The method of claim 52, wherein: the measuring of the changes in power concentrations is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the longitudinal force on the particle includes multiplying the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 57. The method of claim 52, wherein: the measuring of the changes in power concentrations is performed using first and second detectors that produce first and second signals which change in response to the measured power concentration changes of the first and second light beams; and the calculation of the longitudinal force on the particle includes multiplying a difference between the first and second signals by n/cψ′, where ψ′ is a power responsitivity of at least one of the first and second detectors, n is a refractive index of buffer fluid around the particle, and c is the speed of light.
 58. The method of claim 52, wherein the measuring of the changes in power concentrations of the first and second light beams is performed using first and second detectors, the method further comprising: attenuating the first and second light beams before reaching the first and second detectors in a manner that a transmission of the first and second light beams increases or decreases as a function of a distance from a center of the first or second light beams.
 59. The method of claim 58, wherein the transmission of the first and second light beams decreases as a function of distance r from the center of the first or second light beams according to sqrt(1−(r/nR_(L))²).
 60. The method of claim 51, wherein the focusing of the first light beam is performed using a lens, and wherein the first light beam is delivered to the lens via an optical fiber, the method further comprising: exerting a force on and causing a pivoting of a delivery end of the optical fiber. 